On November 27th, the EDGE Research Laboratory team launched and successfully recovered the ArduSat prototype system. Here's a highlights video from the flight: http://youtu.be/CBfteLul9Pg. It was a huge thrill for us to get to work with the team at NanoSatisfi, and help achieve their goal of making space research affordable for everyone. As soon as they post their data analysis, I'll link to it here, but the good news is that the ArduSat payload appeared to work beautifully. Below is a picture that was taken, processed, and stored by the ArduSat system:Recovery was not as easy as might have been desired, as the payload was nearly 2 miles from the nearest road and in a small depression that served to reflect and/or attenuate our tracking signals to the point that they were useless to our chase teams. We were, however, able to call in our airborne team to get a lock on the final location and confirm that everything was recoverable on the ground. There really was nothing out there, but we managed to get permission to recover anyway. It was a 25-minute hike one way...Fortunately, we did get it all back, and had a good time doing it. We've posted a full write-up about this flight on our website at http://www.edgeresearchlab.org/our-projects/edge3-27-oct-2012/, if you're interested, and have a pretty comprehensive set of information on getting started in high-altitude ballooning here (though it looks like many here are already pros at it): http://www.edgeresearchlab.org/contact-us/getting-started/ Of course, if there are questions, we're more than happy to help.But there's more... if you watched the video at the link above, you saw two balloons:(Image courtesy of http://www.sparkfun.com)We were joined at our launch site by a team from Sparkfun (also an ArduSat sponsor) for a dual balloon launch! Even more exciting, their balloon hit more than 130,000 feet before it burst, putting it in among the top 20 highest amateur radio high-altitude balloons. It was awesome to get to launch two balloons from the same site, and fantastic to be involved with such a lofty flight! More details on the Sparkfun flight can be found here: http://www.sparkfun.com/news/996